With the recent string of AppStore rejections devs of apps like Podcaster have been posting the typically flimsy rejection reasons given by Apple. It appears Apple doesn't like the bad press they have received because of this and now have made it clear the contents of Apple rejection letters may not be shared with a new line in the letters:

"THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS MESSAGE IS UNDER NON-DISCLOSURE"

While it is not totally clear whether or not the original NDA that developers are required to sign covers these rejection letters there is no doubt now that if your app is rejected from the AppStore Apple expects you to keep quite and not share the details. You don't want to feel the wrath of Apple do you?

The guys at Google have got to be smiling. A double shot of iPhone App Store banning has mobile developers fuming -- and could provide just the ammo Android needs for its upcoming launch.

Apple has officially kicked two popular apps out of its App Store over the past days. Podcaster, a program that lets you circumvent iTunes to directly download podcasts, found out it was getting the "REJECTED" stamp just before the weekend. Now, the makers of the popular tethering tool NetShare are sharing a similar plight. NetShare disappeared without notice in August. Its creators now say they've finally been told they too are banned for good.

Developers such as Fraser Speirs, who crafted the Flickr browsing app Exposure, are taking strong stands in light of the news. "I will never write another iPhone application for the App Store as currently constituted," Speirs states in a recent blog. "Apple's current practice of rejecting certain applications at the final hurdle -- submission to the App Store -- is disastrous for investor confidence," he says.

Now enter Android. The open source mobile system is set to hit the market any moment, with the much-anticipated T-Mobile device expected to be revealed within weeks. While Google's operating system has suffered its own share of blips along the way, the anger over Apple may be just what it needs to attract positive attention. Android's app "market," as it's being called, will not be moderated or controlled. Instead, any developer will be able to register, directly upload his product and enter a description, and presto -- it's live. Users, not administrators, will vote on apps and determine their placement within the site.

If the first Android phone hits stores soon, the timing could not be better. At a moment when a dictatorship-style approach is causing such grief, the notion of a democratic alternative may have more appeal than ever expected.

Apple stinks ! that's dictature ! so, late november, when HTC Touch HD will be on the market, I'll get one ........ I'm fed up by waiting improvments that didn't came even more than a year after ! and by the attitude of Apple . Bye bye Apple-iPhone .

It could happen. I think its just a matter of drivers and thing of that nature.........the whole thing is open source and every part of android should be available for anyone who wants it by the end of the year.